....Sweet Chariot, coming 'for to carry me home!
Well, I don't know about having someone to carry me home (unless I count myself) but swinging high and low there's been a plenty, with a little bit of swinging upside down, sideways and all over the place...enough to land me a blue eye that might've had you thinking I'd been socking it up with Mayweather and Pacquiao. Guarantee it would've been a bit more of an entertaining fight at least #snaughle (Lame? Yes, I know)
So...swinging low. After gathering up a 2-3 year store of ailments, I found myself, about two weeks ago, having to make a doc appointment for myself. Mmmmm. A doc appointment where the lap and arms usually needed to comfort and/or catch vomit were going to be otherwise preoccupied?Nevertheless, off we went one rainy Thursday morning full of jittery energy. ("we" meaning me). Found a parking spot right in front of the entrance - yay! Shortlived celebration as the little dude started gagging the second I turned the car off. Minutes into the consultation Sam started screeching and trying to buck himself out of his pushchair. After a rushed and chaotic examination and half-listened to diagnosis, I hightailed outta there, hitting the sidewalk just as Sam started projectile vomiting (Not so much a "Yay" for parking right at the entrance in full view of the waiting room, anymore). I kept a hand tapping on his chest (for some reason this sometimes seems to help) while stretching over to open the wet car door but just as I did that Sam started choking and as I turned round to check on him the door slipped out of my hand and wholloped me good and solid in the face. The blood dripping down my face told me I should be crying but really, it was all I could do to keep from plonking myself down on the ground, in the rain, and giving in to hysterical, uncontrollable laughter.
Somehow managed to transfer 20kg's of puking little dude into the car with one hand, while holding my eye with the other. Who knew a person's eyeball could move so flexibly? Did an awesome one-handed fold up of the stroller just as I noticed a beautifully-packaged young lady exiting what I'd thought was an empty, stationary car right across from us. Luckily she found us/me too pitiful a sight to even make eye contact as she walked passed and kept her eyes on the ground. Oh well.
Saturday morning we attended the birthday party of a beautiful little girl....more puke and striking out at the other kids shortly after we got there. Swinging low...again. Excused ourselves early, headed home for some quick puke-damage control and then off to our local Hypermarket, a-buzz with month end shoppers, expecting round 3 of swinging low for that week. Nope. The kid was as calm as could be...swinging high. It's really kind of frustrating not being able to identify specific triggers, which might make outings that little bit easier to manage. But he's constantly-changing triggers seem to have us roped into a warped type of Russian Roulette...just with puke instead of a bullet. *sigh
Last week Saturday was a day filled with some more swinging high, thankfully, when I managed an alarmingly disaster-free talk to a room full of Gatsby-clad women, for a Ladies Tea hosted by the Daniel and Friends Fund at the beautiful La Provence Stellenbosch. It was probably one of the most invigorating and motivating experiences I've had in some time (public speaking is not quite one of my forte's) made that much more exciting by the fact that the occasion was all to raise money for a fabulous cause, the Equine Therapy Project at Haven of Hope Equine Aid Centre, a project close to Daniel and Friends Fund's heart.
I am still busy reading up on as much information as possible regarding Anxiety Disorders, particularly in children with Autism. Most of the info is fairly obvious, but sometimes reading it in black and white, furnished by a third party, makes it grab you a little more. Knowing that I do struggle to contain my own anxieties sometimes (like the occasional, pre outing near-panic when I have to go out alone with Sam knowing it could well end in him having a meltdown and throwing up in a shop...again!) has really hit home with how it in turn feeds Sam's own, already very present anxieties. So we're working on it...and soaking up any bit of advice available...
How to Avoid Passing Anxiety on to Your Kids
On a recent afternoon, JD Bailey was trying to get her two young daughters to their dance class. A work assignment delayed her attempts to leave the house, and when Bailey was finally ready to go, she realized that her girls still didn't have their dance clothes on. She began to feel overwhelmed and frustrated, and in the car ride on the way to the class, she shouted at her daughters for not being ready on time. "Suddenly I was like, 'What am I doing?'" she recalls. "'This isn't their fault. This is me.' "
Bailey has dealt with anxiety for as long as she can remember, but it has become more acute since the birth of her second daughter, when she began to experience postpartum depression. She knows that her anxiety occasionally causes her to lash out at her daughters when she doesn't really mean to, and she can see that it affects them. "You see it in your kids' face," Bailey says. "Not that they're scared, but just the negativity: 'Oh my God, my mommy's upset.' You're their rock. They don't want to see you upset."
Taking cues from you
Witnessing a parent in a state of anxiety can be more than just momentarily unsettling for children. Kids look to their parents for information about how to interpret ambiguous situations; if a parent seems consistently anxious and fearful, the child will determine that a variety of scenarios are unsafe. And there is evidence that children of anxious parents are more likely to exhibit anxiety themselves, a probable combination of genetic risk factors and learned behaviours.
It can be painful to think that, despite your best intentions, you may find yourself transmitting your own stress to your child. But if you are dealing with anxiety and start to notice your child exhibiting anxious behaviors, the first important thing is not to get bogged down by guilt. "There's no need to punish yourself," says Dr. Jamie Howard, director of the Stress and Resilience Program at the Child Mind Institute. "It feels really bad to have anxiety, and it's not easy to turn off."
Witnessing a parent in a state of anxiety can be more than just momentarily unsettling for children. Kids look to their parents for information about how to interpret ambiguous situations; if a parent seems consistently anxious and fearful, the child will determine that a variety of scenarios are unsafe. And there is evidence that children of anxious parents are more likely to exhibit anxiety themselves, a probable combination of genetic risk factors and learned behaviours.
It can be painful to think that, despite your best intentions, you may find yourself transmitting your own stress to your child. But if you are dealing with anxiety and start to notice your child exhibiting anxious behaviors, the first important thing is not to get bogged down by guilt. "There's no need to punish yourself," says Dr. Jamie Howard, director of the Stress and Resilience Program at the Child Mind Institute. "It feels really bad to have anxiety, and it's not easy to turn off."
But the transmission of anxiety from parent to child is not inevitable. The second important thing to do is implement strategies to help ensure that you do not pass your anxiety on to your kids. That means managing your own stress as effectively as possible, and helping your kids manage theirs. "If a child is prone to anxiety," Dr. Howard adds, "it's helpful to know it sooner and to learn the strategies to manage sooner."
What to Do (and Not Do) When Children Are Anxious
It's tempting to protect kids from things that make them anxious, but learning to tolerate anxiety is how we overcome fears.
It's tempting to protect kids from things that make them anxious, but learning to tolerate anxiety is how we overcome fears.
Learn stress management techniques
It can be very difficult to communicate a sense of calm to your child when you are struggling to cope with your own anxiety. A mental health professional can help you work through methods of stress management that will suit your specific needs. As you learn to tolerate stress, you will in turn be teaching your child—who takes cues from your behavior—how to cope with situations of uncertainty or doubt.
"A big part of treatment for children with anxiety," explains Laura Kirmayer, an associate psychologist at the Child Mind Institute, "is actually teaching parents stress tolerance, It's a simultaneous process—it's both directing the parent's anxiety, and then how they also support and scaffold the child's development of stress tolerance."
Model stress tolerance
You might find yourself learning strategies in therapy that you can then impart to your child when she is feeling anxious. If, for example, you are working on thinking rationally during times of stress, you can practice those same skills with your child. Say to her: "I understand that you are scared, but what are the chances something scary is actually going to happen?"
You might find yourself learning strategies in therapy that you can then impart to your child when she is feeling anxious. If, for example, you are working on thinking rationally during times of stress, you can practice those same skills with your child. Say to her: "I understand that you are scared, but what are the chances something scary is actually going to happen?"
Try to maintain a calm, neutral demeanour in front of your child, even as you are working on managing your anxiety.
Dr. Howard says, "Be aware of your facial expressions, the words you choose, and the intensity of the emotion you express, because kids are reading you. They're little sponges and they pick up on everything."
Explain your anxiety
While you don't want your child to witness every anxious moment you experience, you do not have to constantly suppress your emotions. It's okay—and even healthy—for children to see their parents cope with stress every now and then, but you want to explain why you reacted in the way that you did. Let's say, for example, you lost your temper because you were worried about getting your child to school on time. Later, when things are calm, say to her: "Do you remember when I got really frustrated in the morning? I was feeling anxious because you were late for school, and the way I managed my anxiety was by yelling. But there are other ways you can manage it too. Maybe we can come up with a better way of leaving the house each morning."
While you don't want your child to witness every anxious moment you experience, you do not have to constantly suppress your emotions. It's okay—and even healthy—for children to see their parents cope with stress every now and then, but you want to explain why you reacted in the way that you did. Let's say, for example, you lost your temper because you were worried about getting your child to school on time. Later, when things are calm, say to her: "Do you remember when I got really frustrated in the morning? I was feeling anxious because you were late for school, and the way I managed my anxiety was by yelling. But there are other ways you can manage it too. Maybe we can come up with a better way of leaving the house each morning."
Talking about anxiety in this way gives children permission to feel stress, explains Kirmayer, and sends the message that stress is manageable. "If we feel like we have to constantly protect our children from seeing us sad, or angry, or anxious, we're subtly giving our children the message that they don't have permission to feel those feelings, or express them, or manage them," she adds. "Then we're also, in a way, giving them an indication that there isn't a way to manage them when they happen."
After JD Bailey lost her temper at her daughters on their way to dance class, she made sure to explain her reaction, and then focused on moving forward. "I said, 'I'm sorry. Mom is a little stressed out because I have a lot of work going on. Let's listen to some music,' " Bailey recalls. "We cranked up the music in the car, and it changed our mood."
Make a plan:
Come up with strategies in advance for managing specific situations that trigger your stress. You may even involve your child in the plan. If, for example, you find yourself feeling anxious about getting your son ready for bed by a reasonable hour, talk to him about how you can work together to better handle this stressful transition in the future. Maybe you can come up with a plan wherein he earns points toward a privilege whenever he goes through his evening routine without protesting his bedtime.
These strategies should be used sparingly: You don't want to put the responsibility on your child to manage your anxiety if it permeates many aspects of your life. But seeing you implement a plan to curb specific anxious moments lets him know that stress can be tolerated and managed.
Come up with strategies in advance for managing specific situations that trigger your stress. You may even involve your child in the plan. If, for example, you find yourself feeling anxious about getting your son ready for bed by a reasonable hour, talk to him about how you can work together to better handle this stressful transition in the future. Maybe you can come up with a plan wherein he earns points toward a privilege whenever he goes through his evening routine without protesting his bedtime.
These strategies should be used sparingly: You don't want to put the responsibility on your child to manage your anxiety if it permeates many aspects of your life. But seeing you implement a plan to curb specific anxious moments lets him know that stress can be tolerated and managed.
Know when to disengage:
If you know that a situation causes you undue stress, you might want to plan ahead to absent yourself from that situation so your children will not interpret it as unsafe. Let's say, for example, that school drop-offs fill you with separation anxiety. Eventually you want to be able to take your child to school, but if you are still in treatment, you can ask a co-parent or co-adult to handle the drop off. "You don't want to model this very worried, concerned expression upon separating from your children," says Dr. Howard. "You don't want them to think that there's anything dangerous about dropping them off at school."
In general, if you feel yourself becoming overwhelmed with anxiety in the presence of your child, try to take a break. Danielle Veith, a stay-at-home mom who blogs about her struggles with anxiety, will take some time to herself and engage in stress-relieving activities when she starts to feel acutely anxious. "I have a list of to-do-right-this-second tips for dealing with a panic, which I carry with me: take a walk, drink tea, take a bath, or just get out the door into the air," she says. "For me, it's about trusting in the fact that the anxiety will pass and just getting through until it passes."
Find a support system:
Trying to parent while struggling with your own mental health can be a challenge, but you don't have to do it alone. Rely on the people in your life who will step in when you feel overwhelmed, or even just offer words of support. Those people can be therapists, co-parents, or friends. "I am a part of an actual support group, but I also have a network of friends," says Veith. "I am open with friends about who I am, because I need to be able to call on them and ask for help. "
Trying to parent while struggling with your own mental health can be a challenge, but you don't have to do it alone. Rely on the people in your life who will step in when you feel overwhelmed, or even just offer words of support. Those people can be therapists, co-parents, or friends. "I am a part of an actual support group, but I also have a network of friends," says Veith. "I am open with friends about who I am, because I need to be able to call on them and ask for help. "
xxx
Of course, not all of this points are practical suggestions when dealing with Sam...I think only the first three tips might be relevant, but still a helpful article nonetheless!
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